[WSMDiscuss] (Fwd) Sign on: Demand Climate Justice Statement -- A New Normal
Patrick Bond
pbond at mail.ngo.za
Wed Apr 29 18:10:01 CEST 2020
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Sign on: Demand Climate Justice Statement -- A New Normal
Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 15:12:33 +0000
From: Trusha Reddy <Trusha.Reddy at womin.org.za>
Dear friends and comrades,
Thinking of you, your families and communities during this very
challenging time.
It has been inspiring to see all the mobilizing for justice happening
around the world over recent weeks, despite no shortage of challenges,
injustices, and very real impacts experienced by so many. In moments
like this, it is especially valuable to turn to the power of community
and the collective. And in moments like this, the transformative change
we urgently need becomes closer to within reach when we speak with a
united voice to ensure our demands are heard around the world.
In this continued spirit of solidarity, I’m reaching out so share
another opportunity to unite our voices. *The Global Campaign to Demand
Climate Justice is coordinating a global civil society statement*. This
statement illustrates the interconnectedness between the public health,
social, and economic crisis triggered by COVID-19 and the climate
crisis, and highlights how both are caused by the same manipulated and
broken system, and how the solutions to address them are also the same.
It presents world governments with a set of demands for how to justly
respond to the COVID-19 pandemic in a way that lays the foundation for a
new world that is more equitable and beautiful.
*You can find the statement in English, Spanish and French here
<https://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/>**.**Please
sign-on by completing **this google form
<https://forms.gle/V89rjhSg6zjfkahR9>*. And please feel free to share it
amongst your community.
Below are some sample posts for social media, and here is a press
release
<https://www.corporateaccountability.org/media/global-coalition-covid-19-climate-crises-linked-must-be-addressed-as-one/>.
In solidarity,
Trusha (on behalf of DCJ)
*General amplification Tweet:*
Today, 150+ united global orgs released 10 demands to help ensure
#COVID19 recovery leads to a #NewNormal -- one of justice, fairness, and
care. It’s time for a world built for & by people. Read and share the
demands now: @GCDCJ @AsianPeoplesMvt
@FoEinthttps://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/
*Twitter thread (each demand # is a new tweet)*
We stand w/ 150+ orgs calling for a bold and just response to the
COVID-19 pandemic and the climate crisis. We must transform the unequal
economic system that has led to them both. Please read & share the
demands below, led by @gcdcj & social justice leaders around the world.
Read the full letter & list of signatories
here:https://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/
We demand that governments:
1.Prioritise the health and well-being of people. People must ALWAYS be
valued over profit. Gov’ts must prioritize investment in robust public
services.
2.Guarantee the protection of marginalised populations -- from rural
communities, to those in situations of homelessness, people in prison,
refugees and migrants, elders, and more.
3.Issue immediate economic and social measures to provide relief and
security to all, by stopping subsidies for fossil fuels, canceling of
debt payments by Southern countries due in 2020 & 2021 w/ no accrual of
interest nor penalties, transforming tax systems, and more.
4.Support a long-term just transition and recovery out of this crisis,
and take the crisis as an opportunity to shift to equitable, socially
just, climate-resilient and zero-carbon economies. #NoCorporateBailouts
5.Reject efforts to push so-called “structural reforms” that only serve
to deepen oppression, inequality, and impoverishment -- including those
driven by financial institutions such as the World Bank.
6.Bolster international cooperation and people to people solidarity --
honor historical responsibility by sharing resources and technology from
Global North to Global South countries.
7.Collaborate on the development of and unrestricted access to vaccines
and any medical breakthroughs of experimental therapy drugs. The
COVID-19 vaccine, when ready, must reach all people and countries.
8.Immediately cease extractive projects -- from fossil fuels to
industrial agriculture -- and projects that accelerate the climate
crisis and put people’s health at risk.
9.Reject any and all attempts to waive liability of corporations and
industries. These are the actors that are responsible for this crisis
and the inequitable response -- they must be held accountable.
10.Governments must not take advantage of the crisis to push through
draconian measures.
We have the resources and people power to build an economic model that
doesn’t trash the planet and provides for all. Now is our time to move
this forward. Read the full letter & list of signatories
here:https://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/#NewNormal
A New Normal
April 22, 2020 <https://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/>
Nathan Thanki <https://demandclimatejustice.org/author/nthanki/> 1
Comment <https://demandclimatejustice.org/2020/04/22/covid-19/#comments>
To sign on to the statement please complete this form
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1nmMHPrAWAsp5wyj3IFrTLJPJcI7ygnYT_96IQXvz4dc/edit>.
The Spanish and French versions are underneath the list of signatories.**
/Español abajo./ /Para sumar su organización a este pronunciamiento por
favor diligencie este formulario <https://forms.gle/VnXGUNEQgSwfUCa47>. /
/La version français se trouve sous la liste des signataires./ /Pour
signer la déclaration, veuillez compléter _ce formulaire_
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1nmMHPrAWAsp5wyj3IFrTLJPJcI7ygnYT_96IQXvz4dc/edit>.
/
/The COVID-19 pandemic exposes an economic system unable to meet the
needs of people and planet. Our only solution to address this global
crisis, occurring amid a devastating climate crisis, is to join
together and build a more just, resilient, and sustainable world. As
members and allies of the Global Campaign to Demand Climate Justice
we are making an initial set of demands of governments as they
respond to the pandemic. /
The word apocalypse comes from the word for revelation. The COVID-19
pandemic is revealing what the global majority has known all along: that
the dominant economic system prioritises profits over people and planet.
With each new day of infections, deaths and destroyed livelihoods, the
pandemic is exposing the gross injustices of our existing systems. Years
of neoliberalism, ‘structural adjustment’ and austerity have dismantled
the social welfare state, specifically underfunding and hollowing out
health systems across the globe. We are left with deficits of
life-saving equipment, and surpluses of polluting industries.
The dimensions of the collective suffering and individual trauma
unfolding are too vast to contemplate. Families confronting loss or
lockdown in abusive relationships; bodies facing devastating illness;
communities facing hunger and isolation.
But the pandemic has also shown our enormous collective strength, and
the possibilities that emerge when a crisis is taken seriously, and
people join together.
For those of us in the global climate justice movement, the unravelling
of the pandemic comes as no surprise. For decades, as movements we have
denounced the violent impacts of an unequal global economic system, the
devastation of an accelerating climate crisis, and the shockingly cruel
ways in which those least responsible bear its heaviest burdens. For
decades, we have demanded an end to a status quo that was and continues
to be a death sentence for the world’s poorest. The coronavirus crisis
is a stark reminder of a prolonged past, and our response to it a dress
rehearsal for the present and future.
*Justice *
As with the climate crisis, the COVID-19 crisis loads the heaviest
burdens on those most vulnerable. The poorest are affected first and
worst. It inflames the disparities carved by wealth, gender, class,
race, (dis)ability and other intersectional factors. The highest costs
are being borne by those least able to pay them, who were always
condemned to bear such costs.
Most clearly, those most at risk of infection are those least able to
isolate themselves.
A lockdown means confinement in our homes. But some of us are entirely
without a home, or live with multiple family members and relatives in
one house. Some of us are internally displaced people’s or refugee
camps, or in detention centres, or go without access to running water
and sanitation. For some of us, home is the site of violence and abuse,
and staying home means an end to public activity we rely on for our
day-to-day subsistence. Some of us can’t stay home because we are
working in the most crucial and life-sustaining sectors, such as
agriculture, without protection, including many of the subsistence and
family farmers who feed over two-thirds of the world.
Women and girls bear the brunt of care work in our current system, in
the home, in our communities and also in the economy, as they are the
majority of health care workers. This pandemic has shown us the
importance of care work, the work needed to raise families, to cook and
clean and take care of the sick and elderly. It has shown us the
profound impact of the lack of public services and social institutions
for care work . We must use this moment to understand the importance of
care work, share it among all peoples and build a society and economy
that takes on care work based on feminist, care-affirming principles.
In many countries, health, food and basic services sectors are supported
by migrant labour, many of whom do not have a voice, recourse to public
funds and most often serving with the least protection. Migrant voices
are also most often ignored in climate discussions. In times of crises,
whether health or natural calamities, they are one of the most
vulnerable, discriminated against, and ignored.
Those most affected by the climate crisis – people in the Global South
who have faced the violence of environmental degradation, extended
drought, and forced displacement – have now become one of most
vulnerable populations to contagion and its effects. In areas where the
health of communities has been debilitated by polluting industries,
leading to an array of respiratory and immunological conditions, people
are particularly at risk to COVID-19.
The pandemic is already opening the door to a major economic crisis,
with an upcoming recession that will render the vast majority of the
global population – who live day-to-day with precarious livelihoods – in
a condition of even more chronic poverty. The risk of famine and deep
disruptions to food sovereignty is significant. Southern countries are
burdened with illegitimate and unsustainable debt – accumulated through
decades of exploitative and predatory lending by Northern governments,
international financial institutions and big banks in collaboration with
southern elites and those Southern governments with authoritarian and
corrupt practices. The prioritization of payments of these debts have
taken a heavy toll on public services and continue to take up a huge
part of public spending that should be allocated instead to public
health responses to the pandemic.
*A Crossroads*
We are at a crossroads. For years, we have demanded ‘system change not
climate change’. System change now seems more necessary than ever, and
more possible. The rules of the game are changing swiftly. Upheaval is
unavoidable.
The question is: what kind of change is unfolding? What kind of system
is emerging? What direction will change take?
The powerful are taking advantage of the crisis to advance disaster
capitalism and a new authoritarianism, handing themselves expanding
police and military powers, and rushing through extractive projects.
Many governments are seizing the chance to push through draconian
measures, police the population, undermine workers’ rights, repress the
rights of Indigenous peoples, restrict public participation in
decision-making, restrict access to sexual and reproductive health
services, and institute widespread surveillance. In the worst
situations, repressive actors are using the moment of political
instability to violently quash dissent, legitimise racism, religious
fundamentalism and advance predatory mining frontiers, and execute land
defenders.
But the crisis they are making use of, also offers an opportunity for
our movements to shape the emergent future. Our movements know the way
forward, the type of world we need to build. Across the world, people
are realising that our dominant economic system does not meet peoples’
needs. They are clearly seeing that corporations and the market will not
save us. They are noticing that when a crisis is taken seriously,
governments are capable of taking bold action and mobilise enormous
resources to confront it. The limits of the possible can be radically
shaken and rewritten. Within weeks, policy proposals long-campaigned for
in many contexts (an end to evictions, liberating prisoners, bold
economic redistribution to name but a few) have become common-sense and
mainstream responses.
*We are living through a convulsive but very fertile political moment.
Our world has been forced into solidarity by a virus which ignores all
borders; our deep interdependence has never been more undeniable.*
*In such a crisis rethinking and reimagining our economic model is
inescapable. Resilient and justice-based solutions are not only
possible, but the only real solution.*
It is clear now that we need a response of solidarity, equity and care,
with massive public investment that puts people and planet first, not
polluting industries and profiteers. Just recoveries, and global and
national new deals to build a regenerative, distributive and resilient
economy is both necessary, and increasingly politically feasible.
*The Fight for A New Normal*
We will not return to a normal in which the suffering of the many
underwrote the luxuries of the few. While politicians will push for a
rapid resumption of the status quo, we can’t go back to normal, as
social movements have affirmed, when that normal was killing people and
the planet.
Our climate justice movements are in both a perilous and promising
situation. The urgency of climate breakdown has dropped under the radar,
even as climate violence is relentless, expressed most recently in
devastating storms across the Pacific, forest fires in China, and
torrential rains in Colombia. Unless we take this political moment,
climate action will be on the backburner, and economies in the rich
North will be turbocharged and revived with dirty investments that
deepen the climate crisis. We must be vigilant and persevering to ensure
that addressing the climate crisis must be front and center of bailouts,
and programmes to ensure the resilience of society and all peoples.
Our movements have an expertise which is invaluable at this time. While
COVID-19 and the climate crisis may have different direct causes, their
root causes are the same: a reliance on the market, a failure of the
state to address long-term threats, the absence of social protection,
and an overarching economic model that protects investments over lives
and the planet. The same extractivist system that extracts, burns and
destroys ecosystems, is the same system which enables dangerous
pathogens to spread. The solutions to the COVID-19 and climate crises
are the same: solidarity, redistribution, collaboration, equity, and
social protection. It is our opportunity and responsibility to join the
dots, and use this political moment to confront corporate power, and
build a more just and sustainable society.
*The Horizons We Can Claim*
The pandemic has changed the game. We have the resources to build an
economic model that doesn’t trash the planet and provides for all. We
have the momentum to recover from this crisis in a way that builds our
resilience and fortifies our dignity as societies. Now is our time to
claim it.
As members of the Global Campaign to Demand Climate Justice, we demand a
bold response to the COVID-19 pandemic that simultaneously helps address
the wider climate crisis, and transform the unequal economic system that
has led to both.
*We demand that governments*:
1. *Prioritise the health and wellbeing of people. *People must always
be valued over profit, for an economy is worthless without its
people. No one is disposable. Fully fund and resource health
services and systems, ensuring care for all, without exception.
Governments must also prioritise robust investment in other
essential public services, such as safe shelter, water, food and
sanitation. These services are not only essential in stemming the
spread of disease in the long-term, but are core to governments’
obligation to respect, protect, and fulfill human rights for all.
Therefore, they must not be privatised and instead be managed in an
equitable, publicly-accountable manner.
2. *Guarantee the protection of marginalised populations*. Provide aid,
social protection, and relief to rural populations and the families
that compose them, who are at the forefront of feeding our world.
Special protection must also be guaranteed for the social and human
rights of all peoples put in vulnerable and precarious
circumstances, such as those in situations of homelessness, people
in prison, refugees and migrants, elders in home care, orphans, and
especially environmental defenders who are now being murdered with
even greater frequency under the cover of the COVID-19 emergency.
3. *Issue immediate economic and social measures to provide relief and
security to all*, particularly the most vulnerable and marginalised
groups in our societies. Protect labour rights and guarantee
protections for all workers, from the formal to the informal
economy, and guarantee a universal basic income. Recognise,
visibilise and value all care work, the real labour that is
sustaining us during this crisis.
* *Governments must stop subsidies for fossil fuels* and reorient
public funds away from the military-industrial complex, and private
corporations, and use them instead to ensure access to clean energy,
water, and important utilities and public services for the
well-being of communities.
* *We call for an immediate* *cancelation of debt payments by Southern
countries due in 2020 and 2021 with no accrual of interest nor
penalties, *so that funds can be used for health services to combat
COVID19 and for economic assistance for communities and people who
are facing greater hardships in the face of the pandemic and
responses to it. A mere suspension of payments is not enough, and
will simply delay the pain of debt servicing. We also demand an
immediate start to an independent international process to address
illegitimate and unsustainable debt and debt crises to pave the way
for *unconditional debt cancelation for all Southern countries.*
* *Governments must also transform tax systems,* abolishing fiscal
holidays for multinational corporations which undermine revenues,
and abolish value-added tax and goods and services taxes for basic
goods. Take immediate steps towards stopping illicit financial flows
and shutting down tax havens.
4. *Support a long-term just transition and recovery* *out of this
crisis, and take the crisis as an opportunity to shift to equitable,
socially just, climate-resilient and zero-carbon economies. *We
cannot afford bailouts that simply fill corporate pockets or rescue
polluting industries incompatible with a living planet. Rather, we
need an economic recovery that builds resilience, dissolves
injustices, restores our ecosystems, and leads a managed decline of
fossil fuels and a justice-oriented transition towards a fair &
sustainable economy. Governments should pursue economic programmes
including just trade relations that prioritize domestic needs,
dignified and decent jobs across the entire economy, including in
the care economy, ecological restoration and agro-ecology,
essential services and decentralised renewable energy — all
necessary for an equitable and climate-just world.
5. *Reject efforts to push so-called “structural reforms” that only
serve to deepen oppression, inequality and impoverishment*,
including by international financial institutions such as the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund, who may use the pandemic to
push schemes in the Global South under the guise of “shortening the
time to recovery.” The neoliberal pillars of austerity,
deregulation, and privatisation — especially of essential services
such as water, health, education etc — have devastated people across
the world and are incompatible with a just recovery.
6. *Bolster international cooperation and people to people solidarity*.
Global problems that respect no borders, whether they be the climate
or COVID-19 crisis, can only have cooperative and equitable
solutions. In a deeply unequal world, transferring technology and
finance from the richest to the poorest countries is crucial.
Governments should facilitate instead of hindering the efforts of
people’s movements, citizens groups, Indigenous peoples and civil
society organizations to link up across borders and countries for
mutual support. We also call on governments to honor their
historical responsibility and stop using tactics that dismiss that
responsibility and delay a strong international response, such as
withholding funding from the WHO and other institutions in a time of
crisis.
7. *Collaborate on the development of and unrestricted access* *to
vaccines and **any medical breakthroughs of experimental therapy
drugs*, led by principles of international cooperation and free
distribution. We need to ensure that any COVID-19 vaccine will
reach all and that no country will be able to become a monopoly
buyer, and no entity a monopoly producer.
8. *Immediately cease extractive projects*, from mining to fossil fuels
to industrial agriculture, including extraterritorial projects
undertaken by corporations headquartered in your country, which are
accelerating ecological crises, encroaching on Indigenous
territories, and putting communities at risk.
9. *Reject any and all attempts to waive liability of* *corporations
and industries*. The actors that are responsible, in so many ways,
for this multifaceted crisis and the broken system absolutely cannot
be granted loopholes that allow them to escape responsibility for
their abuses at home and across the world.
10. *Governments must not take advantage of the crisis to push through
draconian measures *including the expansion of police and military
powers that undermine workers’ rights, repress the rights of
Indigenous peoples, restrict public participation in
decision-making, restrict access to sexual and reproductive health
services, or institute widespread surveillance under cover of the
crisis.
Signatories
*Global & Regional*
350.org
50by40
ActionAid International
Asian Peoples Movement on Debt and Development
Corporate Accountability
Corporate Europe Observatory
Climate Action Network International (CAN)
Climate Justice Programme
Climate Tracker
Econexus
Extinction Rebellion
Friends of the Earth International
Fundación APY
Gastivists
Green Climate Campaign Africa (GCCA)
Greenpeace
Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature
Indigenous Environment Network
International Network of Women Engineers and Scientists
International Oil Working Group
International Rivers
kinfolk network
Movimento Mocambicano de Mulheres Rurais – MMMR
Observatorio Latinoamericano para la Acción Climática (OLAC)
Oil Change International
Refuel our Future
SERR – SERVICIOS ECUMENICOS PARA RECONCILIACION Y RECONSTRUCCION
Society for International Development (SID)
Sovereign Stories
Third World Network
War on Want
Womankind Worldwide
Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN)
WoMin African Alliance
World Student Christian Federation (WSCF) FUMEC – ALC
Wretched of the Earth
*Africa*
Abibiman Foundation
AbibiNsroma Foundation (ANF) Ghana
African Women’s Development and Communication Network – FEMNET
Alliance for Empowering Rural Communities (AERC-Ghana)
Corporate Accountability and Public Participation (CAPPA) Nigeria
Environment Governance Institute
Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria
Foundation for the Conservation of the Earth (FOCONE)
GenderCC S.A. – Women for Climate Justice
groundWork, Friends of the Earth South Africa
Health of Mother Earth Foundation, Nigeria
Les Amis de la Terre – Togo (Friends of the Earth Togo)
MuGeDe – Mulher, Genero e Desenvolvimento
Nkumba University School of Sciences (NUSCOS)
Parliamentary Forum on Climate Change Uganda
Research and Support Center for Development Alternatives – Indian Ocean
(RSCDA- IO)
Regional Center for International Development Cooperation (RCIDC) Uganda
Uganda National Health User’s / Consumers Organisation (UNHCO)
Vision for Alternative Development (VALD) Ghana
Waterberg Women Advocacy Organization
*Asia*
Agriculture and Forestry Research & Development Centre for Mountainous
Regions, Vietnam
Amihan National Federation of Peasant Women in the Philippines
Asha Parivar
Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (Thailand)
Bangladesh indigenous women’s network
CLEAN (Coastal Livelihood and Environmental Action Network), Bangladesh
Climate Watch Thailand
Consumers Association of Penang, Malaysia
دبين للتنمية البيئية Dibeen for Environmental Development
Digo Bikas Institute
Energy and Climate Policy Institute for Just Transition(ECPI), South Korea
Environics Trust
Environmental Quality Protection Foundation
Friends of the Earth Malaysia
Growthwatch, India
Legal Rights and Natural Resources Center-Kasama sa Kalikasan/FoE Phil
Oriang Women’s Movement Philippines
Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum
Philippine Movement for Climate Justice
PROGGA (Knowledge for Progress), Bangladesh
Roshni Tariqiyati Tanzeem (Pakistan)
Sanlakas Philippines
Socialist Party (India)
Sukaar Welfare Organization-Pakistan
Sustainable Development Foundation: Thailand
The Centre for Social Research and Development (CSRD), Vietnam
The Glacier Trust
United Mission to Nepal
We Women Lanka (Sri Lanka)
Women Network for Energy and Environment (WoNEE), Nepal
*Europe*
2degrees artivism (Portugal)
Aberdeen Climate Action
Artists for Palestine UK
Asamblea Antimilitarista de Madrid (Spain)
Association 3 Herissons
ATTAC España
Berkshire Women’s Action Group
BUNDjugend/Young Friends of the Earth Germany
Campaign against Climate Change
CèNTRIC gastro · El Prat de Llobregat · Barcelona
CIDES (España)
Climáximo (Portugal)
Desarma Madrid (Spain)
Eco Justice Valandovo, North Macedonia
Ecologistas en Acción (Spain)
Entrepueblos/Entrepobles/Entrepobos/Herriarte
Extinction Rebellion Berlin-Südind Worldwide
Extinction Rebellion Bizkaia
Extinction Rebellion Cantabria
Extinction Rebellion Gipuzkoa
Extinction Rebellion Liverpool
Extinction Rebellion Norway
Extinction Rebellion Switzerland
Fabricants de Futur – no flag no frontier
Frack Free Sussex
Frack Off London
Friends of the Earth Scotland
Friends of the Earth Sweden/Jordens Vänner
Global Justice Now
Global Justice Rebellion
Guelaya Ecologistas en acción Melilla (Spain)
Independent Left
Instituto De Estudios de la Tierra (España)
Instituto por la Paz y la Ecologia (España)
Lidera – A Década do Clima
Limity jsme my (Czech Republic)
Madrid Agroecológico (Spain)
Milieudefensie (Friends of the Earth Netherlands)
Mujeres de Negro contra la Guerra – Madrid (Spain)
Notre Affaire à tous (France)
Observatori del Deute en la Globalització (Catalunya)
On est prêt (France)
Ozeanien-Dialog
Positive Money
Programa radiofónico Toma la Tierra, Madrid
Rebelion contra la Extincion – Extinction Rebellion Spain
Red Line Campaign
Scot.E3 (Employment, Energy and Environment)
SETEM
Share The World’s Resources (STWR)
Transition Edinburgh
UK Youth Climate Coalition
Weald Action Group
WhatNext?
WIDE – Network for Women´s Rights and Feminist Perspectives in
Development (Austria)
Young Friends of the Earth Macedonia, North Macedonia
*North America*
350 Triangle, North Carolina
ActionAid USA
Austin DSA
Berks Gas Truth
Better Path Coalition
Center for Biological Diversity
Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL)
Council of Canadians, Peterborough and Kawartha
Earth Ethics, Inc.
Earth in Brackets
Earthworks
EcoEquity
EnGen Collaborative
Environmental Justice Coalition for Water
Extinction Rebellion Centre Wellington, Ontario
Fannie Lou Hamer Institute
Frack Free New Mexico
Friends of the Earth Canada
Friends of the Earth U.S.
Fund for Democratic Communities
Global Resilience
Good Food Jobs
Harrington Investments, Inc
Indigenous Environmental Network – Turtle Island
Institute for Policy Studies Climate Policy Program
MiningWatch Canada
New Jersey student sustainability coalition
New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light
Pan American Health Organization
People for a Healthy Environment, New York
Peterborough Pollinators
Power Shift Network
Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary NGO
Resource Generation
Rising Tide Chicago
Sane Energy Project, New York
Sanford-Oquaga Area Concerned Citizens (S-OACC)
Sisters of Charity Federation
Stand.earth
Sunflower Alliance
Sunrise Movement
SustainUS
The Climate Mobilization
The Climate Mobilization Mont Co Md.
The Global Citizens’ Initiative
The Leap
The Oakland Institute
The Natural History Museum
The Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC UNITED)
Unitarian Universalist Ministry for Earth
United for a Fair Economy
Uplift Climate
Upper Valley Affinity Group
Weaving Earth, Center for Relational Education
WildEarth Guardians
Women Donors Network
*South America*
Amigos de la Tierra Argentina
CEDENMA
CENSAT Friends of The Earth Colombia
Centro de Ciências e Tecnologia para a Soberania, Segurança alimentar
alimentar e nutricional a o Direito Humano à Alimentação e Nutrição
/adequadas . Nordeste. Brasil
Centro Nicaragüense de Conservación Ambiental-CENICA
Colectivo VientoSur
Critical Geography Collective, Ecuador
Foto del Buen Ayre
Fundación para Estudio e Investigación de la Mujer, Argentina
IEASIA – UFPE. Brasil
La Ruta del Clima
ODRI Intersectional rights – Office for the Defence of Rights and
Intersectionality
Plataforma Boliviana frente al Cambio Climático//Bolivian Platform on
Climate Change
TierrActiva Colombia
The Democracy Center
Union of Peoples Affected by Texaco
*Oceania *
ActionAid Australia
Extinction Rebellion Australia
Extinction Rebellion Bondi Beach
Extinction Rebellion Sydney
Friends of the Earth Australia
Hawai’i Institute for Human Rights
Oceania Human Rights
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